Cape Breton Post

RCMP officer grilled in court

Reasons for keeping mass shooter warrants redacted questioned

- HARRY SULLIVAN SALTWIRE NETWORK harry.sullivan @trurodaily.com @capebreton post

HALIFAX — A lawyer representi­ng a consortium of media organizati­ons spent almost a full day in Halifax provincial court Wednesday grilling a senior RCMP officer as to why she insists on keeping informatio­n redacted on the April mass shootings that began in Portapique.

“We had a lengthy discussion about why you would require that the identity of a profession­al anthropolo­gist that you are hiring, why his identity should be blacked out?” David Coles said of his cross-examinatio­n of Sgt. Angela Hawryluk's steadfast position to keep such informatio­n redacted, despite the fact that the police investigat­ion is completed on some of the still-sealed informatio­n.

The officer's response to Coles's repeated questionin­g was that the individual in question is an “innocent” witness whose identity deserves to be protected.

“I mean, he's a hired expert,” Coles said.

A Dartmouth denturist who also had residences in Portapique, Colchester County carried out Canada's largest mass murder during a 13hour shooting rampage April 18-19.

A number of media organizati­ons, including SaltWire Network, have applied to the court for access to informatio­n contained in RCMP search warrants, which Hawryluk had placed under a sealing order by a justice of the peace. Although search warrants are generally supposed to be made public after they have been executed, the Crown elected in this case to initially provide heavily redacted (blacked-out) versions that Coles is continuing to challenge.

Hawryluk told the court that she never intended for the warrants, or informatio­ns to obtain (ITOs), to become public and that doing so could “compromise” the ongoing police investigat­ion into the shooter's activities prior his rampage, which claimed the lives of 22 victims and an unborn baby.

The ITOs before the court include two production orders and five search warrants.

Coles questioned Hawryluk's defence of the redactions, given that some informatio­n has been released by the Crown or, in the case of one witness, is available publicly. Coles said the RCMP discovered the name of the shooter's partner in his denturist business through a search of the province's Registry of Joint Stock Companies.

The media lawyer also took issue during his cross-examinatio­n with a decision by Judge Laurel Halfpenny MacQuarrie following a two-day, in-camera hearing in late July between herself, the Crown and the RCMP. The judge determined that some of the warrant informatio­n would remain permanentl­y sealed, while some of it would be sealed temporaril­y. But he said no unsealing date is attached to the temporary redactions, meaning it could remain secret for years.

Despite Halfpenny MacQuarrie's decision, Coles said a justice of the peace informed him that he “wasn't satisfied” to issue a sealing order based on some of the informatio­n contained in two of the affidavits.

“What has been disclosed to me, she filed two other affidavits to get the two production orders that are part of the package of seven,” he said. “She created and filed two additional affidavits, which, up until my cross-examinatio­n, nobody has known existed, even including the Crown.”

And Coles said there are only five paragraphs in those documents that relate to the ongoing police investigat­ion.

“She's acknowledg­ed that of those five, two of those redacted, even on this thing that we have not seen, two of them relate to investigat­ive matters that are now concluded,” he said of Hawryluk. “Now, she hastens to say, 'Well, maybe something might come up that would cause us to reevaluate that, but at this point in time, there is no ongoing investigat­ion in relation to what is redacted, blacked out, in two of the five.'"

Hawryluk responded by saying there is still an open investigat­ion because she is still waiting for followup DNA and other reports that relate to the redacted portions.

Some of the “temporary” redacted informatio­n pertains to the shooter's former business partner. But Coles said there is no quarantee of when such informatio­n may be released.

“So, this temporary redaction, who knows how long it can be?” he said. “All they are talking about now is revisiting it in six months. This is the outcome of (the judge's) closed-door session with the Crowns and the RCMP. So candidly, you know, I had real trouble that all of these temporary redactions, which are the bulk of the entries in these ITOs, are going to be held confidenti­al off into some future date.”

The next stage in the process will involve oral arguments as to whether some of the redactions from Stage 3 in the process should be lifted and whether notice should be provided to individual­s who provided statements to the police or who are named in the ITOs, so they can be heard by the court, if they object to their names being released.

Two days, beginning Aug. 31, have been scheduled for that hearing, which will take place in either Truro or Halifax.

 ?? TIM KROCHAK/SALTWIRE NETWORK ?? The remains of a home on Portapique Beach Road in Portapique, Colchester County. According to property records, it was owned by the mass shooter who went on a killing spree April 18-19. A number of media organizati­ons, including SaltWire Network, have applied to the court for access to informatio­n contained in RCMP search warrants issued in relation to the killings.
TIM KROCHAK/SALTWIRE NETWORK The remains of a home on Portapique Beach Road in Portapique, Colchester County. According to property records, it was owned by the mass shooter who went on a killing spree April 18-19. A number of media organizati­ons, including SaltWire Network, have applied to the court for access to informatio­n contained in RCMP search warrants issued in relation to the killings.

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